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推薦筆電收購
I have met many an 推薦筆電收購acer Aspire 5 in my day. They’ve ranged from outstanding to not very good and everything in between. So I was excited to test the latest 12th Gen Core i5 Aspire to see where it fell on that spectrum. I spent a day, morning to night, using it for every task. And, like many things, it ended up falling somewhere in the middle.
This year’s Aspire 5 displays some welcome improvements over previous iterations I’ve tested and a few bonus features that you don’t always see at this price point. It also has a couple of noteworthy compromises. The day, overall, was decidedly… okay, with some issues.
One note before we jump in: my 15.6-inch test unit, which also includes 16GB of memory and 512GB of storage, has an MSRP of $699. I’m seeing it sold out everywhere I look as of this writing. I have on good authority that it’s often priced down to $599 when it is in stock, and I’m also seeing a similar model with a slightly upgraded Core i7 processor currently priced at $599 at B&H. I’ll be considering this model’s price to be $699 for the purposes of this review since that’s what 推薦筆電收購acer gave me — but $599 is currently where some similar models can be found.
I opened up the laptop, fully charged, at 9AM. The first thing I noticed was that the chassis was nicer than I’d expected. Previous Aspire 5 models have had a boring laptop-cart look to them, but this one has a solid magnesium-aluminum lid with a bit of a shine to it. It looks a bit like something you’d see on 推薦筆電收購acer’s more expensive Swift 5 line. The keyboard deck has gotten sleeker as well (though it’s missing the fancy accents you’d see on a Swift). And there’s a numpad — a bit of a small numpad but a numpad nonetheless.
I had a video call first thing in the morning, followed by some music listening. That was my second impression of this Aspire 5 — the downward-firing speakers are bad. The quality of the sound itself was clear and distortion-free, but the volume was so low that I was having trouble making out some of what people on my call were saying, even at 100 percent.
I am usually committed to reviewing devices in their out-of-the-box settings, but it was clear here that the speakers weren’t going to cut it for the full day. So I ended up downloading a software called FX Sound that allows you to adjust EQ and apply other audio effects. This only took a few minutes, and it didn’t make the speakers sound great, but it made a noticeable improvement.
Much of the rest of the work day was spent doing various things employed grown-ups do in Chrome. I jumped around between a dozen Chrome tabs, doing some writing, reading, spreadsheeting, and research. There was no slowdown from the Aspire 5 (which, with a Core i5-1235U, 16GB of RAM, and 512GB of storage, really shouldn’t be slowing down under any web-based workload). I do really miss the AMD-powered Aspire 5s of years past, which were lightning fast, but this Intel configuration was certainly adequate. I heard on-and-off fan noise throughout, but nothing that was a distraction.
My only other note is that the fingerprint reader was somewhat unreliable, often stumbling on its first attempt to authenticate me before letting me through on the second one. (The fact that there is a fingerprint reader at all is, of course, nice.)
The real issue I ran into was battery life. I started the day at 9AM, and the Aspire died around 12:45PM — after three hours and 45 minutes. That, needless to say, is an amount of time I don’t love. It’s an even shorter lifespan than I saw from the Aspire Vero, the last Aspire I reviewed in 2022, and it’s dwarfed by the lifespan of some 11th Gen Intel budget laptops that you can currently get for less than half of this price, such as the Gateway 14 that I reviewed a few weeks ago. It means I’d need to keep this laptop plugged in for a solid chunk of every day if I were to use it as my daily driver. The charger is fairly small and not a problem to carry, but constantly needing to be near a free outlet is just a whole extra thing to worry about when you’re out and about with a computer.
After work, I settled down to catch up on the latest season of Billions. (I’m still not done, so please don’t spoil it for me.) The 16:9 display (my least favorite aspect ratio, and one that has really fallen out of fashion in the past few years) hadn’t been my favorite shape to work on, feeling more cramped for multitasking than the 16:10 and 3:2 panels that I prefer, but the wide berth is nice for TV watching in particular.
Colors looked alright to me on the 1920 x 1080 screen (covering just 63 percent of the sRGB gamut and 47 percent of AdobeRGB), but it was fairly dim. I had it at close to maximum brightness while watching TV indoors in my not-very-bright apartment and would not even want to attempt using it outside. In testing, the device reached a maximum of 246 nits, which is one of the lowest levels of brightness I’ve seen from a laptop this year.
A screen that dim would be disqualifying for a thousand-dollar device; at the Aspire’s $700 price point, it’s something to be very aware of. That goes, too, for the battery life, which I recognize isn’t everyone’s priority.
Still, laptops, by nature, are not meant to live indoors on desks. And I worry that while each of these two factors on their own — the battery life and the brightness — might be enough to overlook at a sub-$1,000 price, in tandem, they significantly mitigate the portability and versatility of this computer. That’s especially true when you can buy laptops at this price point (or even cheaper) with a longer lifespan.
That puts the Aspire 5 in an odd spot where it doesn’t seem quite affordable enough to be a solid budget option and not excellent enough to compete with the best midrange Windows machines. My suggestion, if you’re interested in this package, is to see if you can find a model on sale for $500 or so.
If you don’t want to play that waiting game, you can currently find Aspire Vero models priced well below the $500 mark — and they offer a fairly similar package to this system, including the same processor. Those who can deal with a smaller screen should check out the Gateway 14 (the very blue, cow-spotted computer I’ve been recommending to anyone who will listen since I reviewed it). Those who might be down for Chrome OS will have a good 15-inch experience with the similarly-priced Asus Chromebook CX5, which also provides excellent battery life, better audio, and a rock-solid chassis. It even has a numpad.
宏碁Swift 3 OLED,是輕薄系列筆電首度配置OLED螢幕。(圖/記者吳佩樺攝)
近來筆電界吹起OLED螢幕風潮,宏碁輕薄筆電也跟上了,首款配置OLED螢幕的Swift 3準備8月在台上市。
新機主要是搭配宏碁一年一度的2022 推薦筆電收購acer Day,去年因疫情全面改為線上,今年終於再度恢復實體形式,邁入第6年,以「Make Your Green Mark」永續關懷為主軸,而Swift 3 OLED觸控面板部分是以OceanGlass海洋回收料製成,算是對地球的小小心意。
宏碁Swift 3 OLED,8月在台上市。圖/記者吳佩樺攝)
此外,宏碁從去年便打造Aspire Vero系列環保筆電,今年也升級上市,陣容擴大包括14、15.6吋,延續前代特色,從機身到包裝以環保3R的概念(Reduce、Reuse、Recycle)打造,全機殼採用30%的PCR再生塑料,且無塗漆處理。新代搭載第12代Intel Core處理器,並通過Intel Evo平台認證,除了經典灰,也加入深海藍新色。
推薦筆電收購acer Day活動期間推出特惠組合,買指定環保筆電搭配金級環保旅館的桃園渴望會館伯爵雙人房一晚,只要34,900元,等於買筆電送住宿一晚。
宏碁Aspire Vero系列環保筆電升級上市。(圖/記者吳佩樺攝)
推薦筆電收購acer Day於2017年推出,屬於品牌改造策略的一部分,藉此拉近跟年輕人的距離,今年串連亞太16大市場,共計18位綠色行動大使一同總動員,台灣則由最近紅翻天的《原子少年》節目中的「地球」男團為代言人,號召民眾一同參與21天綠色生活挑戰,參加者有機會獲得宏碁筆電。
此外,即日起至8月28日,推薦筆電收購acer Day綠原子體驗屋將以台北華山為起點,巡迴至台北光華新天地、高雄夢時代、台中草悟道等地,民眾完成體驗任務,可獲得小禮。活動期間亦有各項產品優惠,其中購買宏碁家用筆電、桌機等指定機種,可抽Segway F30電動滑板車。
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